Bioresource Technology, Vol.150, 298-306, 2013
Characterization of a new oxygen-insensitive azoreductase from Brevibacillus laterosporus TISTR1911: Toward dye decolorization using a packed-bed metal affinity reactor
This study reports the identification of a new bacterial azoreductase from Brevibacillus laterosporus TISTR1911, its heterologous production in Escherichia coil, the biochemical characterization and immobilization for use in dye biodegradation processes. The recombinant azoreductase (BrAzo) is a monomeric FMN oxygen-insensitive enzyme with a molecular mass of 23 kDa showing a broad specificity for the reduction of synthetic azo dyes. Double hexahistidine-tagged BrAzo was immobilized onto a nickel chelating column and methyl orange was used to assess its degradation potential using a packed-bed reactor. The dye degradation is described by an exponential model in a downstream batchwise continuous flow mode operated with recycling. The complete degradation of methyl orange (170 mu M at 600 mL/h) was achieved in 3 h and continued over 9 cycles. Coupling the immobilized BrAzo with glucose dehydrogenase for NADH regeneration yielded a shorter 1.5 h-degradation period that was maintained throughout 16 cycles. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Azoreductase;Brevibacillus laterosporus;Methyl orange;Immobilization;Recycle packed-bed reactor